What's your favourite way to colour?

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Cuckoo Bananas

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I'm still getting a grasp on colours, been using powdered oxides so far and my batch tonight didnt colour so well, i've ended up with a pukey colour (which is probably karma for laughing at another post here of puke looking soap). I really want to get rich vibrant looking colours so what do you all recommend as the best products to get that?
 
Lots of people like micas, ultramarines, and oxides, but I like my Select Shades liquid colors. There are a few colors that I just can't get out of them, so I keep some of the powdered colorants on hand for those.
 
i like my powder oxides, i also use some cheap michaels color that works well for hp, not vibrant color though, red- hot pink, green and blue work well.
 
What is YOUR FAVORITE way to color?

I seem to turn to oxides most often for my CP soaps. I like some of the clays as well....but most of them make a soap that is too drying for only but the younger skin types. French Rose clay is my favorite though...you get a lovely dusty rose color and it is not drying in small amounts. I swirl with micas but these are less successful for me as an all over colorant. I have played with a few soap dyes, but I like the clays and oxides better....they give a softer color to the soaps which I find to be more inviting than the brighter, harsher dye colors. Just my own preferences though. Actually, I like best of all to just let the soap come out the color it wants to be on its own...brown, tan, creamy yellow or off white!
 
Spinach "dust", smashed carrot, smashed pumpkin, beetroot, cooked onion shell ... are my choice of natural colorants.

For more vibrant color I use food color for kids (light orange, vibrant red, yellow, blue)...

They are all untoxic and water based.

I would be very careful with oxides as a colorants in body-care products.
 
So far I've only used oxides, micas and herbes. I mix them all the same way and have had pretty good luck. I always, and only want a swirl effect, solid colour is not something I have attempted, and am so far not in any hurry. But I do hp so if I don't like how the colour is going, I have a chance to fix it.
 
a few minutes ago i tried using yerba mate tea grounded up into a powder. its a dark greenish color with a little abrasiveness to it such as using grounded up oatmeal in soap. its $3.99 for 2.2lbs of it so why not try it?? its definitely worth a try! we will see how it turns out!
 
color

We use rose, and red clays for color, also ground parsley (green), tumeric (orange), annatto seeds (yellow/orange) and alkanet root (purple). We try to stay all natural.
 
i thought oxides were for soap making, they are body safe correct?
 
Alexandra said:
Spinach "dust", smashed carrot, smashed pumpkin, beetroot, cooked onion shell ... are my choice of natural colorants.

For more vibrant color I use food color for kids (light orange, vibrant red, yellow, blue)...

They are all untoxic and water based.

I would be very careful with oxides as a colorants in body-care products.

This post has really got me excited.
I had thought of using beetroot carrot etc as colourants but feared they'd bleed onto your hands in use.
Does this happen?
also I own a food dehydrator . If I dry the sliced veg then put them through a coffee grinder I can use the powder & store the rest in sealed bags?

Please can you give a little more information on your colouring techniques,
Janr
 

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